Christ our Bridegroom

For the most part this series on different ways Christians have understood the atonement, i.e., Christ’s saving work, will be focusing on the heaviest hitters, those images that have been the most influential or important in history. Today I’d like to do something a bit different, and think through a perspective that has never been … Continue reading Christ our Bridegroom

Christ our Passover

Last week, we started this series on the history of how Christians have understood the atonement — that is, what Jesus did that saved us — by looking at the notion of recapitulation, the idea that Jesus saved us by essentially rebooting humanity and being entirely faithful where both Adam and God’s chosen people both … Continue reading Christ our Passover

Christ the Fulfillment: The Doctrine of Recapitulation

It’s always a fascinating exercise to think about what it would have been like to be among the first Christians. For, unlike us, they did not have a ‘New Testament’. They did not have a Christian tradition to fall back on. What those first Christians had was their Jewish Scriptures and theological traditions and an … Continue reading Christ the Fulfillment: The Doctrine of Recapitulation

Atonement Across the Ages: Introduction

One of the purposes of this blog is to talk about the Christian Gospel from different perspectives or through different lenses than many of us are used to. Sometimes this looks like challenging common assumptions through looking at the theological perspectives of groups that have not historically had a seat at the theological table (such … Continue reading Atonement Across the Ages: Introduction

The Cross from Jesus’ Perspective: A Reflection on Matthew 21.33-46

Today is Thanksgiving Sunday here in Canada, but as I was getting ready to write a post in honour of the holiday, I realized that today’s Gospel reading is a very important one, and one that I’ve never actually reflected on in this space. For it’s in this parable that Jesus explains how he understood … Continue reading The Cross from Jesus’ Perspective: A Reflection on Matthew 21.33-46